originally posted in:The TopHat Society
[b]It's half full.[/b]
It's clearly full of water, it isn't empty of water.
Only reasoning is the when you say half full or half empty it's part of human responses and consensus.
Believing what you think whether right or wrong people, naturally believe they are right.
Until they say it out loud.
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It has water and air in it
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False. The glass is always full
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[b]1/2.[/b] [spoiler]The cup is merely at 50% capacity. All other methods of saying it are just because people understand it differently, such as 50% = 'half' and capacity could mean full/lacking/empty, depending on the given context. And said 50% is relative to the consumable therein (water) and does not include air or any other gas, nor will cater for the cup itself.[/spoiler]
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Edited by Legion: 9/16/2016 11:07:36 PMDepends are you drinking it or filling it?
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Edited by Xeno: 9/16/2016 11:05:25 PMIf the cup is empty and then water is poured into it, it's half full. If the cup is more than half full, and then water is poured out until it has half, its half empty.
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Half empty
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Duh if its filling its half full if its emptying its half empty if its neither its neither
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It is less than half full for the volume of water in the glass is less that the area remaining in the glass. And yes, I did measure it.
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If you filled it to the top, and he drank half, it's half empty. If you just fill it half way, it's half full. Boom
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It's half a glass
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It is filled with the perfectly maximized balance of air and water for the current quantity, temperature and pressure. The universe gravitates to extremes: a maximum or a minimum.
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It's completely full, there's air where there isn't water. [spoiler]¡Viva México![/spoiler]
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The water in it doesnt appear to fill half the glass, so id say neither.
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Depends what it's full of